Sullivan v. Southern Ry.

54 S.E. 586, 74 S.C. 377, 1906 S.C. LEXIS 114
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMay 25, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 54 S.E. 586 (Sullivan v. Southern Ry.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sullivan v. Southern Ry., 54 S.E. 586, 74 S.C. 377, 1906 S.C. LEXIS 114 (S.C. 1906).

Opinions

The opinion here was filed May 5, 1906, but remittitur held up on petition for rehearing until *Page 378

May 25, 1906. The opinion of the Court was delivered by The plaintiff sought by this action $1,000 damages on account of the alleged wilful and malicious acts of the defendant in refusing to check the baggage of the plaintiff, who was a passenger with a ticket from Abbeville to Greenwood on the 19th of September, 1902, and in throwing said baggage from the train and allowing it to remain uncared for.

The history of the case as taken from the appellant's brief is about as follows: "That on September 19th, 1902, the plaintiff purchased at Abbeville a ticket from Abbeville to Greenwood, and requested the agent to check his baggage accordingly, paying him forty-five (45c.) cents excess baggage charges; the agent, however, checked the baggage to Hodges; plaintiff went to the agent again and directed him to check to Greenwood; the agent wilfully and maliciously refused to do so, repaid the plaintiff forty-five cents and cast the trunk off the train, informing the plaintiff that it might lie out on the ground in the weather so far as he was concerned, that it should not be carried into the depot or baggage room; that the train was a moving off then, and plaintiff had to wait until he got to Hodges before notifying a friend at Abbeville to look after the baggage and send it to him at Greenwood; that his damages were $1,000.

"The defendant denied the material allegations of the complaint as above set forth.

"The testimony was conflicting upon what occurred at the depot in Abbevile between the plaintiff and the agent of the company. These facts, however, are beyond dispute: At the time in question, the last train leaving Abbeville for Hodges was the 2:20 P.M. train, the one upon which the plaintiff was a passenger. It connected at Hodges with the train for Greenville; a passenger for Greenwood would have to lie over at Hodges from 2:45 P.M. till 9 or 10 o'clock that night, when the train from Greenwood would arrive at Hodges and carry him on to Greenwood. The defendant *Page 379 had issued instructions to the agent at Abbeville not to check the baggage through to points beyond Hodges, upon the Abbeville Branch, which did not connect at Hodges with the main line train for the passenger's destination. The reason for this rule was that all baggage from Abbeville to points beyond Hodges was handled directly by the baggage-masters upon the two trains; the agent at Hodges having nothing to do with any baggage except that checked to or at Hodges. A ticket was sold to the plaintiff from Abbeville to Greenwood and his baggage was checked to Hodges. The plaintiff insisted that his baggage should be checked to Greenwood; the agent insisted that under his instructions he could not do so; the plaintiff handed back the Hodges checks to the agent, saying that if the baggage could not be checked to Greenwood he need not check it at all; the excess baggage charge was returned to the plaintiff; the baggage was taken off the train and remained at the station until the plaintiff had it carted over to the Seaboard depot and sent to Greenwood; he remained at Hodges from 2:45 P.M. till about 9 or 10 o'clock that night, when he boarded the train from Greenville and arrived at Greenwood in due time; he did not need his baggage until the next morning, when he received it on the Seaboard; his actual damages were forty-five (45c.) cents; the price of a through ticket from Abbevile to Greenwood was forty-five (45) cents, twenty-five cents less than the straight fare from Abbeville to Hodges and thence to Greenwood."

We think it is well to produce the Judge's charge and the grounds of appeal therefrom:

JUDGE'S CHARGE.
"This is an action brought by the plaintiff here against the defendant to recover damages. He alleges in his complaint that he was a traveling salesman, and carried with him trunks of samples of wearing apparel. He states that it was the custom of the defendant, and of other railroads in this State, to carry the samples of traveling salesmen as *Page 380 baggage upon the same terms and conditions that they carried personal baggage — except that the railroad requires them to pay excess for the carrying of trunks which contain samples. He states that he carried his trunks of samples from Greenwood, S.C. to Abbeville, S.C. and that the defendant was fully informed that the trunks contained samples; that he paid therefor the sum of forty-five cents as excess for carrying this baggage. He alleges that on the 19th day of September, 1902, he went to the depot of the defendant company at Abbeville, S.C. that he paid for that ticket the full fare asked.

"He states that he requested the agent of the said defendant company at Abbeville, S.C. to check his trunks from Abbeville, S.C. to Greenwood, S.C. point to which he had purchased said first class ticket; that he paid the agent of the defendant company at Abbeville, S.C. the sum of forty-five cents for excess baggage. He states that the agent there — instead of checking his trunks to Greenwood, S.C. the point to which he had bought his ticket, and the point to which he had requested that his baggage should be checked — checked them to Hodges; that he then went to the agent of the defendant company and directed him to check his baggage for Abbeville, S.C. to Greenwood, S.C. and that the agent of the defendant company wilfully and maliciously refused to check his trunks any farther than Hodges, although plaintiff had bought his ticket from Abbeville, S.C. and had paid the excess rate on this baggage from Abbeville, S.C. to Greenwood, S.C. He says that the agent of the defendant company then refunded to him the sum of forty-five cents, which he had paid, and wilfully and maliciously caused said trunks to be thrown off, and informed plaintiff at the time he did so that the trunks might lie out on the ground in the weather so far as he — said defendant's agent — was concerned, and that they should not be carried into depot or baggage room. He states further that about the time this took place, the train on which plaintiff had taken passage was moving away, and plaintiff was *Page 381 obliged to leave said baggage at the place where the agent of the defendant company had wilfully and maliciously cast same until he arrived at Greenwood, S.C. when he notified a friend at Abbeville, S.C. to take charge of it and send it to the plaintiff at Greenwood, S.C. which was done. He states that this act on the part of the agent of the defendant company was wilful and malicious, and that in the presence of other people he was humiliated, and he states further, that by reason of that and on account of delay, trouble and expense which he was put to on account of this act of the agent of the defendant company, and his wilfulness and maliciousness, he has been damaged in the sum of one thousand dollars, and asks judgment for that amount.

"The defendant company denies the allegations of the plaintiff's complaint. That is, they deny that their agent acted maliciously in the premises when he cast those trunks off the train, and that he refused to send them to Greenwood, S.C. The defendant company denies each and everything that the plaintiff alleges.

"Now, those are the issues as made by the complaint of the plaintiff in this case and the answer of the defendant, and upon that you have heard the testimony, and upon that testimony you will apply the law as I give it to you.

"You have got to decide this case.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Calder v. Southern Ry.
71 S.E. 841 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1911)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 S.E. 586, 74 S.C. 377, 1906 S.C. LEXIS 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sullivan-v-southern-ry-sc-1906.